Several Navajo Textiles in storage at a Tucson home, which has been under renovation, were stolen sometime between August 2018 and May 2019. Unfortunately, the owner only has photos of the textile pictured here.

The textiles were purchased at an auction benefiting the Museums of New Mexico Foundation on August 5, 2017. The textile pictured is approximately 5’ x 9’.

If you have any information regarding this this textile, please contact Matt Messner at mhmessner@aol.com

The following list of items were stolen from an AirBnB on August 13, 2018, in Santa Fe, NM. Items with photos are marked with the item list number.

If you have any information on the whereabouts of these items, please contact Officer Mariscal with the Santa Fe Police DepartmentPolice report #18-012321 Officer Mariscal 505-428-3710edmariscal@ci.santa-fe.nm.us

A few weeks ago this bracelet by Michael Roanhorse was shipped via UPS. It was lost/stolen in shipping. UPS states the package was last scanned in Albuquerque.The bracelet is 18k gold with a Candelaria turquoise stone.

If you have any information as to the whereabouts of this bracelet, please contact Gene Waddell at 480-755-8080 or via email:watradeco@aol.com

On the evening of Sept 12th or early morning of Sept 13th, approximately 300 items of jewelry were stolen during a "Smash and Grab" style burglary from Toh-Atin Gallery in Durango, CO

The majority of items stolen were Navajo bracelets and necklaces, as well as a significant number of Hopi and Zuni pieces. Most pieces date from the 1960s - 1980s. Most items were silver, but there were a number of gold pieces and some Santo Domingo shell items.

The gallery is offering a $2,500 reward for information leading to the thieves and the recovery of the jewelry.

Additional photos will be posted as they become available.

Please be on the lookout for anyone selling a large quantity of jewelry. If you have any information, please contact Detective Christopher Thomson with the Durango Police Department: 970-375-4732 or email: chris.thomson@durangogov.org. Police report P17-27464

On August 18, 2017, a trailer filled with artworks belonging to artist, Darryl Growing Thunder was stolen in Santa Fe, NM.

Stolen items include approximately 12 ledger drawings, a painted parfleche box (pictured) and a briefcase containing a personal sacred cannupa (pipe) and other religious items.

Trailer Description: 5' x 8' enclosed cargo trailer, white in color. There is a blue sticker on the upper middle of the front panel with "I-94" on it. The rear door swings open and there is another door on the passenger side panel.

A report has been filed filed with the Santa Fe Police Department.

Case# 17-012927

If you have any information about these items, please contact Officer Anthony Currey at 505-340-6158 or 505-955-5049.

This ancient stone carved mask has a rounded human face on one side. The verso is a caved skull with two inlaid black obsidian eyes.The mask is approximately 8" tall by 7" wide.It has an extremely high value.

The mask was stolen in August of 2016. The last known location was at the gallery:Christophe JORON-DEREMCommissaire-Priseur46 rue Sainte-Anne75002 PARIS

If you have any information, please contactWalter KnoxKnox Artifacts Gallery480-703-3122orHoward RoseArte Primitivo Gallery212-570-6999

The owner of this piece was on a road trip from New York City to Oklahoma and believes that it went missing in or near Branson, Missouri.

The item was in a white nylon drawstring bag which was inside a clear DVD case.

This piece was taken as a "trophy" from a slain warrior at the Sand Creek Massacre by the owner's great-great grandfather. The owner had planned to return the item to the proper tribe when it was lost.

There is a $1,000 reward for the return of the item.

More information about the history of the amulet can be found on the KY3 News Website

Click image for larger view

If you have any information about the location of this piece, please contact Mike Allen at 212-416-3506 or at mike.allen@wsj.com or contact the Branson Police Department at 417-334-3300.

Allen is a reporter for the Wall Street Journal. He wrote an extensive article on the history of the amulet. You can search for that article called "My Great-Great-Grandfather and an American Indian Tragedy" online.

Between the dates of October 21 and 24, UCM catalog number 10176 was stolen from an exhibit case in the Anthropology Hall of the CU Natural History Museum. It is a Navajo coffee pitcher. The pitcher is dark brown in color with a handle at the top across from the spout, which has six straining holes. There is a fiber cord attached to the handle. Its dimensions are 16.5 cm L (including the handle and spout), 10.5 cm W, and 18 cm H.

The pitcher is a “Navajo Coffee Pot or Pitcher, European Style” collected by Earl H. Morris from the “Southwestern United States” and donated in the 1940s to the CU Museum by Lucile Morris, Earl’s second wife.

Please contact CU Museum staff or the CU police department if you have any information on this item. Thank you.